Instrument Caches
Learn how to manually instrument your code to use Sentry's Caches module.
A cache can be used to speed up data retrieval, thereby improving application performance. Because instead of getting data from a potentially slow data layer, your application will be getting data from memory (in a best case scenario). Caching can speed up read-heavy workloads for applications like Q&A portals, gaming, media sharing, and social networking.
Sentry offers a cache-monitoring dashboard for getting an overview of your application's caches.
To make it possible for Sentry to give you an overview of your cache performance, you'll need to create two spans - one indicating that something is being put into the cache, and a second one indicating that something is being fetched from the cache.
Make sure that there's a transaction running when you create the spans. If you're using a web framework like Rails those transactions will be created for you automatically. See Performance Monitoring for more information.
For detailed information about which data can be set, see the Cache Module Developer Specification.
Follow the steps below to make sure your Cache related spans end up in Sentry correctly.
- Set the cache value with whatever cache library you happen to be using.
- Wrap the part of your application that uses the cached value with
Sentry.with_child_span { |span| ... }
- Set
op
tocache.put
. - Set
cache.item_size
to an integer representing the size of the cached item.
(The steps described above are documented in the snippet.)
key = 'myCacheKey123'
value = 'The value I want to cache.'
Sentry.with_child_span(op: 'cache.put') do |span|
# Set a key in your cache using your custom caching solution
my_cache.set(key, value)
# Describe the cache server you are accessing
span.set_data('network.peer.address', 'cache.example.com/supercache')
span.set_data('network.peer.port', 9000)
# Add the key you want to set
span.set_data('cache.key', key)
# Add the size of the value you stored in the cache
span.set_data('cache.item_size', value.size) # Warning: if value is very big this could use lots of memory
end
- Fetch the cached value from whatever cache library you happen to be using.
- Wrap the part of your application that uses the cached value with
Sentry.with_child_span { |span| ... }
- Set
op
tocache.get
. - Set
cache.hit
to a boolean value representing whether the value was successfully fetched from the cache or not. - Set
cache.item_size
to an integer representing the size of the cached item.
(The steps described above are documented in the snippet.)
key = 'myCacheKey123'
value = nil
Sentry.with_child_span(op: 'cache.get') do |span|
# Get a key from your caching solution
value = my_cache.get(key)
# Describe the cache server you are accessing
span.set_data('network.peer.address', 'cache.example.com/supercache')
span.set_data('network.peer.port', 9000)
# Add the key you just retrieved from the cache
span.set_data('cache.key', key)
if value
# If you retrieved a value, the cache was hit
span.set_data('cache.hit', True)
# Optionally also add the size of the value you retrieved
span.set_data('cache.item_size', value.size)
else
# If you could not retrieve a value, it was a miss
span.set_data('cache.hit', False)
end
end
You should now have the right spans in place. Head over to the Cache dashboard to see how your cache is performing.
Our documentation is open source and available on GitHub. Your contributions are welcome, whether fixing a typo (drat!) or suggesting an update ("yeah, this would be better").